Poipet

These photos are from the bus trip between Bangkok, Thailand, and Siem Reap, Cambodia. This was a fourteen-hour bus ride: three hours to cover 250 kilometers (about 100 miles) on the Thai side, two hours to pass Cambodian immigration, and NINE hours to cover 75 miles on the Cambodian side! This is because Cambodian roads are phenomenally bad–paving is strictly optional.

And here is a completely gratuitous statue of some god/demon killing a bull. Cambodia is full of sights like these; I never did find out what this one meant.

A Cambodian gas station. Gas is stored in a variety of containers, from the big plastic containers shown here, to soda and water bottles (!)

...and this is a bad one. Note the giant potholes, big enough to sink an elephant in. I didn't get a photo of the worst road, but let's just say it was an asphalt version of a bad dirt road, complete with washboarding and giant potholes. Curiously enough the entire mess was still covered evenly asphalt, suggesting that this travesty was *intentional* !

Poipet, the border town between Thailand and Cambodia. This is a pretty rough town: within 5 minutes of our entry to Cambodia, a sneak thief struck our group. Fortunately, he didn't get anything.

Poipet is largely unmechanized. Here, a giant cart is being hauled by a team of five men (!).

This is a not so good Cambodian road...(and bear in mind, this is a major highway!)

This is also a good Cambodian road, nice flat dirt, good view over the ricefields.

Oxcarts and cars share the road in Cambodia!

Believe it or not, this is a *good* Cambodian road. Bumpy as hell, but at least you're not going to break an axle.